Ethereum (ETH) has climbed back above $3,000, riding a wave of broader crypto market strength. The question now is whether this bounce has the momentum to turn into something more sustainable, or if it's just another false start.
Right now, Ethereum is trading at $3,121 with a market cap of $375 billion. Over the past week, it's up 4.3%, trailing the 14.6% surge in XRP (XRP) but outpacing Bitcoin (BTC), which gained 3.2% to reach $91,076.
Technical Picture Looks Okay, But Institutional Interest Is Fading
Trader Michael van de Poppe pointed out that Ethereum's recent price structure is actually looking fairly healthy from a technical standpoint. ETH confirmed an upside breakout and is now retesting that level, which is textbook behavior during the early stages of a trend reversal. The price is still holding above the 21-day moving average, which keeps the short-term bullish structure intact.
But here's where things get murky. Data from CryptoQuant is flashing some concerning signals about demand. The Coinbase Premium Gap, which tracks the difference in buying pressure between U.S. institutional investors on Coinbase and global retail activity on Binance, has turned negative and fallen to its lowest level in 10 months. Translation: selling pressure on Coinbase is outweighing buying activity elsewhere, and that's historically been a red flag for sustained Ethereum rallies.
Without that "smart money" accumulation from U.S. institutions, Ethereum's ability to break through resistance becomes a lot more questionable. ETH has repeatedly failed to reclaim the key $3,300 level after tumbling from its $4,700 peak. Until U.S. spot demand picks up and the premium turns positive again, the odds of a durable breakout remain low, and Ethereum could be vulnerable to further downside.




